A possible impending visit by Russian President Vladimir Putin to North Korea could deepen military ties between the two nations in violation of UN Security Council resolutions, South Korean and US officials said yesterday.
South Korean Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Kim Hong-kyun, in an emergency telephone call with US Deputy Secretary of State Kurt Campbell, said Putin’s visit should not result in more military cooperation between Pyongyang and Moscow in violation of the resolutions, the South Korean Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.
Echoing Kim’s concerns, Campbell pledged continued cooperation to tackle potential regional instability and challenges caused by the trip.
Photo: EPA-EFE / Alexander Kazakov / Sputnik / Kremlin Pool
“While closely monitoring related developments, the two sides agreed to resolutely respond through airtight cooperation to North Korea’s provocations against South Korea and actions that escalate tensions in the region,” the ministry said in a statement.
A senior official at Seoul’s presidential office on Wednesday said that Putin was expected to visit North Korea “in the coming days.”
Russia’s Vedomosti newspaper on Monday reported that Putin would visit North Korea and Vietnam in the coming weeks.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov on Thursday declined to give a date or agenda for a possible visit, but said Russia’s right to develop closer ties with North Korea should not be in doubt or a source of fear for anyone.
North Korean Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs Kim Son-gyong issued a statement via state media accusing Washington of staging a “serious political provocation aimed at tarnishing” North Korea’s image by holding a UN Security Council meeting on its human rights situation this week.
Russia has used North Korean-made missiles and artillery shells to attack targets in Ukraine, officials in Washington, Seoul and Kyiv, as well as UN sanctions monitors and independent experts, have said.
North Korea and Russia have denied arms deals, but vowed to deepen cooperation across the board, including in military relations.
Speaking at the Stimson Center think tank in Washington on Wednesday, Campbell said that the US has a very good understanding of what North Korea has provided Russia, which he said has had “a substantial impact on the battlefield.”
Less clear, he said, is what Russia has provided North Korea.
“Hard currency? Is it energy? Is it capabilities that allow them to advance their nuclear or missile products? We don’t know, but we’re concerned by that and watching carefully,” he said.
In testimony in March to the US Congress, US Director of National Intelligence Avril Haines said that Russia has been forced by its need for support in its war against Ukraine to grant some “long-sought concessions” to North Korea, as well as China and Iran, “with the potential to undermine, among other things, long-held non-proliferation norms.”
Haines did not elaborate on her statement, but the reference to weakening non-proliferation norms appeared to be a warning that Russia could provide North Korea with military-related technology.
This growing cooperation and willingness to exchange aid in military, economic, political and intelligence matters enhances their individual capabilities, assists them to undermine the rules-based order and gives them some insulation from international pressure, she said.
Civilian aircraft have been cleared from Pyongyang’s airport and there are signs of preparations for a possible parade in the capital’s Kim Il-sung Square, NK Pro, a Seoul-based Web site, reported this week, citing commercial satellite imagery.
“It remains possible that the parade or large event will not coincide with Putin’s visit, but as Kim [Jong-un] is likely to treat their summit with great importance, it’s also possible North Korea could put on a special event to celebrate Russian-DPRK [Democratic People’s Republic of Korea] ties at the square,” wrote Colin Zwirko, a senior analytical correspondent with NK Pro.
In past instances, such preparations were made only days before the event, he added.
When then-Russian minister of defense Sergei Shoigu visited Pyongyang last year to jump-start the two nations’ warming ties, he accompanied Kim Jong-un to a parade and saluted as North Korea’s banned nuclear-tipped missiles rolled by.
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